Knight Terrors
Knight Terrors is a 2023 DC Comics crossover event that plunges the DC Universe into a horror-themed nightmare realm orchestrated by the villain Insomnia.[1][2] The storyline begins with the death of a longtime enemy at the Hall of Justice, unleashing terrifying events where heroes and villains alike are trapped in personalized nightmares designed to exploit their deepest fears and secrets.[1][3] Central characters include Batman, Superman, Wonder Woman, and Deadman, who investigate Insomnia's motives for revenge against the DC heroes, while the Sleepless Knights serve as his enforcers in this realm beyond life and death.[1][2] Written primarily by Joshua Williamson with art by Howard Porter, Giuseppe Camuncoli, and others, the event features a four-issue core miniseries, a prologue in the Dawn of DC Knight Terrors Free Comic Book Day Special Edition (released May 6, 2023), and numerous two-issue tie-in limited series involving characters like Poison Ivy, Nightwing, and the Flash.[3][2] Published from July to September 2023 as part of the Dawn of DC initiative, Knight Terrors draws inspiration from horror classics like A Nightmare on Elm Street, emphasizing psychological terror and impacting ongoing DC titles.[3][2] The event concludes with heroes escaping the nightmares to confront Insomnia in the real world, setting the stage for future storylines in the DC Universe.[1][2]Publication History
Development and Announcement
DC Comics announced Knight Terrors in February 2023 during a presentation at the ComicsPRO convention in Pittsburgh, positioning it as a key summer event within the broader Dawn of DC publishing initiative launched earlier that year to refresh and expand the DC Universe's storytelling.[4] The crossover was conceived as a horror-infused narrative where nightmares overrun the DC Universe, building on the post-Infinite Frontier era's emphasis on interconnected character arcs while setting the stage for subsequent major storylines like The Gotham War.[5] Lead writer Joshua Williamson, known for his work on titles such as Dark Crisis on Infinite Earths and Batman, drove the event's development, drawing inspiration from classic horror elements like those in A Nightmare on Elm Street to explore the psychological depths of DC's heroes and villains through personalized nightmares.[2] This approach echoed nightmare motifs from prior DC events, such as the multiversal horrors in Dark Nights: Death Metal, but focused on intimate, character-specific terrors rather than cosmic-scale threats.[3] The main four-issue miniseries featured art by Giuseppe Camuncoli, Stefano Nesi, and Caspar Wijngaard, with additional contributions from Howard Porter and Guillem March on key issues like the prologue one-shot Knight Terrors: First Blood.[6] Williamson's vision emphasized a compact, two-month event spanning July and August 2023, incorporating multiple two-issue tie-in miniseries to spotlight individual characters' nightmares under a new villain, Insomnia.[7] Tie-in creative teams, including writers like Matthew Rosenberg and G. Willow Wilson, were revealed progressively in April 2023 announcements, allowing for diverse explorations across the DC roster.[6] Building hype, DC released a Free Comic Book Day Special Edition on May 6, 2023, serving as the event's prologue and introducing Insomnia's looming threat through a story focused on Damian Wayne's nightmares, illustrated by Howard Porter and Chris Bachalo.[4] This issue, co-written by Williamson, provided an accessible entry point, teasing the Nightmare Realm that would ensnare the Justice League and beyond, while aligning with Dawn of DC's goal of delving into heroes' vulnerabilities.[6]Release Timeline
The Knight Terrors event kicked off with the Dawn of DC: Knight Terrors Free Comic Book Day Special Edition #1 on May 6, 2023, serving as the initial preview and launch for the horror-themed crossover.[8] The main prelude issue, Knight Terrors: First Blood #1, was released on July 4, 2023, alongside the debut issues of several two-part tie-in miniseries, including Knight Terrors: Batman #1, Knight Terrors: The Joker #1, Knight Terrors: Poison Ivy #1, and Knight Terrors: Black Adam #1.[9][10][11] The core four-issue limited series began publication on July 11, 2023, with Knight Terrors #1, followed by Knight Terrors #2 on July 25, 2023; Knight Terrors #3 on August 8, 2023; and Knight Terrors #4 on August 22, 2023.[12][13][14][15] Tie-in miniseries continued rolling out biweekly during July and August 2023, with second issues such as Knight Terrors: Batman #2, Knight Terrors: The Joker #2, and Knight Terrors: Poison Ivy #2 arriving on August 1, 2023, while others like Knight Terrors: Superman #2 and Knight Terrors: Wonder Woman #2 followed on August 15, 2023, and concluding installments such as Knight Terrors: Nightwing #2 and Knight Terrors: Catwoman #2 on August 22, 2023.[16][17] The event concluded with the oversize finale Knight Terrors: Night's End #1 on August 29, 2023, after which affected ongoing series resumed their regular numbering and publication in September 2023.[18]Creative Teams
The main Knight Terrors series, spanning four issues, was written by Joshua Williamson, who served as the primary architect for the event's overarching narrative of nightmares and horror invading the DC Universe. Penciling duties were handled by Giuseppe Camuncoli, with inks by Stefano Nesi and colors by Caspar Wijngaard, creating a visually intense depiction of dream realms and monstrous manifestations.[19] The series' main covers were illustrated by Ivan Reis and Danny Miki, capturing the event's central themes of insomnia and terror through dramatic, shadowy compositions.[20] Tie-in miniseries featured collaborative efforts that expanded on individual heroes' nightmares while tying into Williamson's core story. For Knight Terrors: Batman #1-2, Williamson returned as writer, paired with artist Guillem March, whose gritty, atmospheric artwork emphasized Batman's psychological descent into fear.[21] In Knight Terrors: Superman #1-2, Williamson again wrote the scripts, with Tom Reilly providing the art to explore Superman's vulnerabilities in a surreal, otherworldly setting, colored by Nathan Fairbairn for heightened emotional depth.[22] Other tie-ins showcased diverse talents, such as Matthew Rosenberg and Stefano Raffaele on Knight Terrors: The Joker, blending horror with the villain's chaotic psyche.[23] Editorial oversight for the event was led by Paul Kammerdiner and Maggie Howell, ensuring cohesion across the main series and numerous two-issue tie-ins during the Dawn of DC initiative. Variant covers, a hallmark of the event, were contributed by artists like Francesco Mattina, Puppeteer Lee, and Dan Mora, often emphasizing nightmare motifs such as distorted hero silhouettes, skeletal forms, and eerie, dreamlike distortions to evoke the pervasive theme of insomnia's grip.[24] Notable crossovers included guest artists like Howard Porter on the prelude one-shot Knight Terrors: First Blood and the finale Knight Terrors: Night's End, where he delivered pivotal horror sequences bridging the event's arcs.[18]Fictional Elements
Key Concepts and Villains
Insomnia, real name Christopher Lukas, serves as the central antagonist in Knight Terrors. A newly introduced villain, Lukas lost his family during a Justice League battle against evil Batmen in the Dark Nights: Metal event, which drove him insane; he subsequently murdered members of a support group and was imprisoned in Arkham Tower. He was empowered by exposure to Lazarus Resin during the Lazarus Planet event, transforming him into a being capable of manipulating sleep and dreams to ensnare heroes and villains alike in personalized nightmares.[25][26][27] His abilities allow him to plunge the entire DC Universe into a state of forced slumber, targeting the psychological weaknesses of his victims as revenge against the Justice League and heroes who represent order and justice.[6] The nightmare realm functions as a supernatural dimension where individuals' deepest fears materialize as tangible threats, creating a disorienting dreamscape that blurs the boundaries between subconscious terror and physical reality.[6] This realm is amplified by Insomnia's pursuit of the Nightmare Stone, a powerful magical artifact capable of disabling positive dreams and enhancing nightmarish manifestations, which he seeks to fully harness his dominion over the dream world.[28] The mechanics emphasize entrapment, where escape requires confronting and overcoming these manifested fears, underscoring the event's exploration of vulnerability in superhero archetypes.[6] Supporting characters Deadman (Boston Brand) and the original Sandman (Wesley Dodds) play crucial roles in navigating the nightmare realm, with Deadman possessing bodies to infiltrate dreams and gather intelligence, while Sandman, resurrected through Lazarus Planet energies, provides expertise on dream lore drawn from his historical cases.[6][28] Together, they ally with Batman to counter Insomnia's forces, including his minions the Sleepless Knights—a horrifying army of corrupted, nightmarish versions of DC heroes—and investigate the artifact's location amid the chaos.[28] Insomnia's emergence ties into established DC lore through the discovery of Doctor Destiny's body at the abandoned Hall of Justice, which initiates the heroes' investigation into the dream incursions and links the event to prior supernatural threats like the Lazarus Planet cataclysm.[1] Thematically, Knight Terrors delves into psychological horror by stripping away the invincibility of superheroes, forcing them to confront personal traumas and exposing the fragility beneath their heroic facades in a narrative that prioritizes mental dread over physical combat.[6]Prelude Events
Batman, Superman, and Wonder Woman discovered the body of Doctor Destiny, one of their earliest foes, inside the Hall of Justice during a routine meeting, marking the initial inciting incident of the Knight Terrors crisis.[29] This grim find prompted an immediate investigation by the trio, uncovering evidence of a supernatural assault that blurred the boundaries between reality and dreams.[1] The probe revealed the involvement of Insomnia, a newly empowered villain whose abilities—gained from exposure to Lazarus resin during the Lazarus Planet catastrophe—enabled him to manipulate dreams and impose a sleep-inducing curse on victims worldwide.[30] This curse, tied directly to the supernatural upheavals of Lazarus Planet where a volcanic eruption granted metahuman powers to many, including Insomnia while he was imprisoned at Arkham Asylum, began spreading as an insidious threat that forced targets into inescapable nightmares.[25] The Free Comic Book Day 2023: Dawn of DC – Knight Terrors Special Edition served as an early harbinger, depicting Damian Wayne falling into a tormented sleep after a night of patrolling with Batman, where horrific visions invaded his rest and foreshadowed the curse's activation on heroes.[31] As the curse took hold, prominent Justice League members reported vivid, debilitating nightmares that disrupted their vigilance, signaling the prelude's escalation to a global scale.[32]Plot Summary
Main Series Overview
The Knight Terrors four-issue miniseries, written by Joshua Williamson with art by Howard Porter, centers on a supernatural crisis engulfing the DC Universe as heroes are ensnared in personalized nightmares orchestrated by the villain Insomnia. In issue #1, Batman, Superman, and Wonder Woman discover the corpse of Doctor Destiny within the Hall of Justice, prompting an investigation that uncovers Insomnia—a former Arkham Asylum inmate transformed by the Lazarus Planet's toxic rains into a being capable of infiltrating and manipulating dreams. Insomnia swiftly traps the world's heroes in nightmarish realms, revealing his quest for the elusive Nightmare Stone, an artifact that could amplify his powers to dominate reality itself; Boston Brand, known as Deadman, emerges as a spectral guide, possessing Batman's body to resist Insomnia's influence and probe the villain's psyche for vulnerabilities.[33] Issue #2 escalates the conflict as Deadman, now allied with the resurrected Golden Age hero Wesley Dodds (the original Sandman), delves into Dodds' unsolved cases from decades prior to locate clues about the Nightmare Stone, while Batman navigates his own subconscious horrors within the dream world.[13] Their investigation leads them to the Red Tornado's nightmare, where Insomnia's broader scheme is exposed: by weaponizing collective fears, he aims to erode the boundary between the waking world and eternal slumber, subjugating humanity under his rule as the self-proclaimed God of Nightmares.[34] In issue #3, Deadman, Sandman, and a reluctant Damian Wayne (Robin) form an uneasy team-up to battle manifestations of Insomnia's "Sleepless Knights"—undead enforcers patrolling the liminal space between dreams and reality—while venturing deeper into the villain's backstory.[35] The narrative explores Insomnia's motivations rooted in profound personal loss, as flashbacks reveal how the deaths of his family during a Justice League-related catastrophe fueled his vengeful transformation and hatred for the heroes who inadvertently caused it.[26] The miniseries culminates in issue #4 with a high-stakes infiltration of Insomnia's fortified Arkham Tower in the Nightmare Realm, where Deadman, Sandman, and Robin confront the villain amid a desperate bid to reclaim the Nightmare Stone before it unleashes irreversible chaos. Though the heroes ultimately defeat Insomnia by exploiting his emotional weaknesses and shattering his control over the dreamscape, the victory comes at a cost, leaving a lingering "curse" that hints at unresolved nightmare energies persisting in the DC Universe. Overarching the arc is a thematic emphasis on the fragile balance between dream and reality, portraying heroism not as physical triumph but as the courage to confront and overcome one's inner demons.Tie-in Integration
The tie-in miniseries of Knight Terrors unfold simultaneously within Insomnia's Nightmare Realm, a dreamscape where the villain's curse forces DC Universe characters to confront personalized terrors, directly converging with the main series' central events of heroes battling to shatter the Nightmare Stone and awaken the world.[6] This shared framework ensures that individual nightmares reflect the global spread of Insomnia's influence, initiated after the discovery of his body in the main storyline, thereby amplifying the event's horror theme across parallel narratives.[4] Crossovers enhance interconnectedness, with recurring characters such as Deadman serving as a guide through the realm in both the main series and select tie-ins, while figures like the Joker and Batman bridge multiple arcs— for instance, magical elements in tie-ins echo the main plot's supernatural confrontations involving the Sleepless Knights.[6] In Knight Terrors: The Joker, an unexpected alliance forms between Batman and the Joker against Insomnia's manipulations, revealing shifts in their rivalry that extend beyond the core narrative's focus on the Trinity's quest.[36] These tie-ins play a crucial pacing role by offering parallel perspectives on the curse's escalation, released weekly alongside the four-issue main series to heighten tension toward the finale where heroes unite to counter Insomnia's threat.[37] Structured primarily as two-issue formats, they emphasize character-specific fears—such as Poison Ivy's environmental dreads or Harley Quinn's relational anxieties—while collectively advancing the overarching menace of a world trapped in eternal slumber.[38]Tie-in Series
Batman and Justice League-Focused Tie-ins
In the Knight Terrors: Batman two-issue miniseries, Bruce Wayne confronts his deepest fears of failure and loss while trapped in the Nightmare Realm, where he is stalked by nightmarish manifestations of the terror he instills as Batman.[10] In the first issue, Wayne relives the horror of his own creation turning against him, forcing him to navigate shadows born from his vigilante identity before they consume him entirely.[10] The second installment escalates as Wayne delves into the recesses of his psyche to reclaim control of his body, embodying an even greater terror to survive the encroaching darkness and escape Insomnia's grasp.[16] The Knight Terrors: Nightwing storyline examines Dick Grayson's identity crises and lingering traumas from his Robin days, manifesting as a nightmare where he awakens in jail accused of murdering a loved one without recollection.[39] Issue #1 depicts Grayson haunted by humanoid pigs reenacting his parents' fatal circus accident at Haly's, amplifying his struggles with self-definition amid Bat-family expectations, while the Batgirls aid in unraveling whether he was framed.[39] In #2, Grayson allies with cellmates Two-Face and Scarecrow to flee Arkham Asylum, confronting vivid flashbacks of the alleged crime that test his resolve against Insomnia's psychological torment.[40] Knight Terrors: Robin centers on Tim Drake's arc of Bat-family dynamics and isolation, pitting him against Jason Todd in a shared nightmare that revives their rivalries and personal demons within the Nightmare Realm.[41] The debut issue thrusts the duo into a battle of Robin versus Robin, amplified by nightmarish variants, as they relive darkest moments that highlight Drake's fears of disconnection from his adoptive family.[41] The conclusion forces the "undynamic duo" to transcend their differences while on the brink of death, overcoming individual hells of isolation and betrayal to unite against the encroaching threats.[42] Shifting to an ensemble perspective in Knight Terrors: Detective Comics, the narrative explores Gotham's heroes facing collective perils in the dreamscape, with a focus on Jim Gordon's encounter with a demonic ritual that endangers the city and his daughter Barbara.[43] Issue #1 reveals Gordon stumbling upon disciples chanting around an enchanted clock, one fused with his former robotic Batsuit, unleashing creatures that target Barbara and symbolize Gotham's corruption.[43] The second issue intensifies as Gordon probes monstrous embodiments of power, wealth, and knowledge—manifesting as horrors like diamonds spilling from mouths—consulting Oracle to trace the nightmare's origins and rally against its permanence.[44] These tie-ins underscore Batman's pivotal leadership amid the broader event's nightmare invasion, as Deadman possesses his body to coordinate Justice League efforts and subvert Insomnia's control over the waking world.[45] Through these Gotham-centric ordeals, the stories emphasize themes of familial bonds and resilience, integrating with the main series by portraying Batman's strategic role in awakening allies from eternal slumber.[7]Superman and Wonder Woman Tie-ins
In the Knight Terrors event, tie-in issues featuring Superman and Wonder Woman delve into the vulnerabilities of god-like heroes trapped in the Nightmare Realm, where their immense powers amplify personal doubts about identity, legacy, and isolation.[22][46] These stories contrast the heroes' superhuman strength with internal fears, such as Superman's dread of outliving everyone he loves or Wonder Woman's questioning of her divine role in a world of endless conflict.[47][48] The Knight Terrors: Superman miniseries (issues #1-2, written by Joshua Williamson with art by Tom Reilly) centers on Clark Kent's descent into nightmares that erode his hope and connection to his Kryptonian heritage. In #1, Superman crashes into the Nightmare Realm mid-flight and manifests as the "Super-Reaper" at a haunted version of the Daily Planet, desperately searching for his family and friends amid visions of universal solitude.[22][46] This issue explores his fear of being the unkillable survivor of a lifeless cosmos, a psychological terror that strips away his optimism.[46] Issue #2 continues as Superman and Supergirl navigate a distorted Metropolis haunted by echoes of Krypton's past, confronting familial losses while an unlikely group of heroes battles the Sleepless Knights in the waking world.[17] These nightmares highlight Superman's struggle to reconcile his alien origins with his human bonds, forcing him to question if his powers doom him to eternal isolation.[47] Complementing this, Knight Terrors: Action Comics (#1-2, written by Phillip Kennedy Johnson and Leah Williams with art by Vasco Georgiev, Mico Suayan, and others) shifts focus to Superman's extended family and allies, emphasizing how the Nightmare Realm preys on their interconnected vulnerabilities. In #1, Power Girl battles a nightmarish doppelgänger of herself after escaping Johnny Sorrow, while the Super-Twins (Osul-Ra and Kira) are hunted through a dreamscape by a monstrous Cyborg Superman, their adoptive father twisted into a devourer of the Super-Family.[49] Superboy, Kong Kenan, and the Steel family mount a desperate rescue, underscoring the collective peril to Superman's supporting network.[49] Issue #2 escalates with Power Girl traversing a collapsing ideal world in search of an exit, as the powerless Super-Twins confront the rampaging Cyborg Superman, who threatens to leave no "final El" standing.[50] These tales reveal the fragility of Superman's heroic legacy when his loved ones become pawns in Insomnia's horrors.[51] Knight Terrors: Wonder Woman (#1-2, written by Josie Campbell and Stephanie Williams with art by Juan Ferreyra and Meghan Hetrick) portrays Diana Prince grappling with her godhood and the illusion of lasting peace, allying with mystical figures against mythical terrors. Issue #1 sees Wonder Woman and Detective Chimp probing a breach at the abandoned Hall of Justice, entering a realm where nightmares solidify; they join the Justice League Dark to rescue Queen Nubia from the Well of Souls and combat encroaching horrors.[52] This setup forces Diana to confront doubts about her ability to foster harmony in a deceptive dream world.[53] In #2, the team becomes ensnared in a labyrinth of terror, where Wonder Woman battles inner insecurities manifesting as lies that undermine her truth, while Nubia duels Tartarus's lost souls to affirm her queenship.[54] These encounters blend Diana's warrior ethos with magical uncertainty, illustrating her fear that divine power cannot conquer the chaos of mortal strife.[48] Knight Terrors: Black Adam (#1-2, written and illustrated by Jeremy Haun) explores Teth-Adam's fears of losing control and his mortal vulnerabilities, transforming him into a young version of himself amid battles against Insomnia's creatures in Kahndaq. In #1, Black Adam rules Kahndaq but faces nightmares that strip his powers, forcing him to confront his past as a slave and champion. Issue #2 delves deeper into his psyche, where he encounters a spectral cat (Bast) and fights to reclaim his thunder, highlighting the isolation of absolute power.[55][56] Extending themes of youthful power corrupted, Knight Terrors: Shazam! (#1-2, written by Mark Waid with art by Roger Cruz) amplifies Billy Batson's childlike fears into monstrous threats for the Shazam family. In #1, Billy faces dual nightmares as both himself and Captain Marvel, each tormented separately; his innocence clashes with visions that endanger the entire Shazamily if the Captain falters.[57] These dreams distort familial bonds into lethal perils, magnifying Batson's worries about growing up too fast.[58] Issue #2 follows Mary Marvel in a looping nightmare confronting her deepest fear, opposed by the Nightmare Captain, emerging transformed as her innocence warps into something darker.[59] Across these arcs, the tie-ins uniquely probe how "gods among men" like Superman, Wonder Woman, and Shazam confront power's isolating burdens, distinct from more grounded fears elsewhere in the event.[46][60]Other Hero Tie-ins
In the Knight Terrors: Green Lantern two-issue miniseries, Hal Jordan returns to space to probe disturbances in Sector 2814 with Kilowog and fellow Lanterns, confronting nightmare constructs that erode his willpower through visions of past traumas, including the death of his father and failures as a hero.[61] The narrative escalates in the second issue as Jordan faces distorted versions of the Guardians of the Universe and the fear entity Parallax, forcing him to reclaim his resolve amid Insomnia's psychological assault.[62][63] Knight Terrors: The Flash #1-2 centers on Barry Allen racing to a hospital after Wally West sustains a near-fatal injury from a solo confrontation with Gorilla Grodd, who infects the young speedster with a curse drawing Barry into the Nightmare Realm.[64] As Allen delves deeper, he battles manifestations of his fears tied to time manipulation and personal losses, culminating in a desperate effort to outrun Grodd and prevent Wally's death in issue #2.[65][66] The Knight Terrors: Zatanna miniseries portrays the sorceress as one of Earth's few remaining conscious individuals in issue #1, using her reversed incantations to shield unconscious allies like Wonder Woman and Detective Chimp from attacks by Insomnia's Sleepless Knights.[67] In #2, Zatanna traverses a labyrinthine dreamscape, evading a "knighted" and corrupted Robotman—transformed into a rusted monstrosity—while grappling with hallucinatory echoes of her father Giovanni Zatara's harsh magical training.[68][69] Knight Terrors: The Joker #1 traps the titular villain in a banal nightmare where Batman perishes unceremoniously by slipping on a banana peel, stripping Joker of his chaotic purpose and relegating him to a mundane office job in a sanitized Gotham.[70] The second issue deepens this horror as Joker's psyche fractures, leading him to don a Batman costume and hunt criminals in a futile bid to revive his arch-enemy's legacy, revealing unexpected vulnerability beneath his madness.[71][72] In the Knight Terrors: Punchline two-issue miniseries, the Joker protégée initially believes her unhinged mind grants immunity to Insomnia's nightmare plague, allowing her to seize control of Gotham's criminal underworld and clash with Batgirl amid a heist involving the Royal Flush Gang in #1.[73] Issue #2 pits Punchline against a nightmare version of Batgirl for control of Gotham's hearts and minds, forcing her to confront her deepest fears and anxieties to defeat the illusion and claim dominance.[74] Complementing this, Knight Terrors: Ravager #1-2 follows Rose Wilson separated from Stormwatch and tasked with safeguarding her younger self from the sadistic Murder Man and his Slaughter Squadron in a gore-drenched dream realm.[75] The story intensifies in #2 with visceral encounters against abominations like two-headed spiders, emphasizing Ravager's anti-heroic resilience under Insomnia's curse.[76] Knight Terrors: Poison Ivy #1-2 (written by G. Willow Wilson with art by Atagun Ilhan) traps Pamela Isley in a pastel-colored suburban nightmare where she lives a "perfect" domestic life with Harley Quinn, but the idyllic facade unravels into horror as her eco-terrorist identity erodes. In #1, Ivy awakens in a manicured paradise that suppresses her powers and true nature. Issue #2 sees the dreamhouse collapse, forcing Ivy to fight twisted plant horrors and reclaim her feral self to escape Insomnia's control.[77][78] Knight Terrors: Catwoman #1-2 (written by Tini Howard with art by Leila Leiz) places Selina Kyle in a nightmare Gotham where her sister Maggie (as Sister Zero) is the heroic savior, thwarting Selina's criminal ambitions. In #1, a scarred ex-queenpin Selina hunts the Joker but clashes with Maggie, leading to an uneasy alliance. Issue #2 escalates as Selina rescues a trapped Bruce Wayne from Maggie's cult-like followers, confronting her fears of familial betrayal and lost independence.[79][80] Knight Terrors: Harley Quinn #1-2 (written by Tini Howard and Leah Williams with art by Hayden Sherman and Ben Templesmith) reimagines Harley as a classic A-list superhero in a nightmare where she breaks Insomnia's illusions but faces escalating meta-horrors. In #1, Harley conquers her fears through chaos, entering a "Debug Room" with the Multiversity Guidebook. Issue #2 has her clashing with the Justice League and Lady Quark in a multiversal glitch, blending humor with her anxieties about irrelevance.[81][82] Knight Terrors: Titans #1-2 (written by Andrew Constant with art by Scott Godlewski) follows the Titans trapped in Titans Tower turned into a house of horrors, guided by Raven's voice and a mysterious girl evading zombie-like monsters. In #1, the team ascends the Tower of Terror to escape shared nightmares. Issue #2 reveals the girl's identity tied to the team's past, as they battle monstrous versions of themselves to break free.[83][84] Lesser-known tie-ins such as Knight Terrors: Angel Breaker #1-2 offer niche exploration of supporting characters, with the assassin Angel Breaker allying with thief Raptor to breach an abandoned Kobra safe house containing a device linked to Doctor Destiny's dream-manipulating powers.[85] Their uneasy partnership navigates horrors in #2, highlighting interpersonal tensions and character growth amid the event's broader occult threats.[86]Participating Titles
Core Miniseries
The core miniseries of the Knight Terrors event is the four-issue Knight Terrors #1-4, written by Joshua Williamson with art by Howard Porter, which advances the overarching narrative of Insomnia's nightmare invasion. Released from July to August 2023, the issues were published on July 11 (#1), July 25 (#2), August 8 (#3), and August 22 (#4), 2023.[12][13][14][15] These issues emphasize psychological horror and serve as the structural backbone, incorporating elements from tie-ins for narrative cohesion. Flagship tie-in two-issue limited series include Knight Terrors: Batman, Knight Terrors: Superman, Knight Terrors: Wonder Woman, Knight Terrors: Nightwing, and Knight Terrors: Green Lantern, which delve into personalized nightmares afflicting key DC Universe heroes under Insomnia's influence. Released between July and August 2023, these titles explore each protagonist's deepest fears with cross-references to the core series. They garnered high sales among tie-ins, with Batman and Superman leading in initial orders.[87] Knight Terrors: Batman #1-2, written by Joshua Williamson with art by Guillem March, explores Bruce Wayne's confrontation with manifestations of his past traumas in Gotham's shadows, amplifying Insomnia's realm-wide influence on the Dark Knight. The first issue was published on July 4, 2023, followed by the second on August 1, 2023.[88] Williamson's involvement here mirrors his role in the core series, fostering thematic unity through shared motifs of isolation and guilt. Knight Terrors: Superman #1-2, also penned by Williamson with pencils by Tom Reilly, centers on Clark Kent's battle against illusions that exploit his vulnerabilities as both hero and family man, linking directly to Insomnia's manipulation of hope into despair. Issue #1 hit stands on July 18, 2023, with #2 releasing on August 15, 2023.[17] This miniseries underscores the event's exploration of heroism's psychological toll, with Williamson's consistent voice tying it to broader Justice League dynamics. Knight Terrors: Wonder Woman #1-2, co-written by Josie Campbell and Stephanie Williams with art by Juan Ferreyra, follows Diana Prince and allies like Detective Chimp as they navigate nightmarish traps in the Well of Souls, revealing Insomnia's targeted assaults on themes of truth and redemption. Both issues were released on July 18 and August 15, 2023, respectively.[52] The story integrates mythological horror elements, providing narrative weight to the Trinity's collective struggle against the event's antagonist.[89] Knight Terrors: Nightwing #1-2, written by Becky Cloonan and Michael Conrad with art by Daniele Di Nicuolo, depicts Dick Grayson's descent into clown-infested horrors that prey on his acrobatic prowess and familial bonds, connecting to Insomnia's spread of fear across Blüdhaven. The miniseries launched on July 18, 2023, concluding on August 15, 2023.[39] Its focus on personal resilience reinforces the core event's themes of confronting inner demons.[90] Knight Terrors: Green Lantern #1-2, co-written by Jeremy Adams and Alex Segura with art by Mario "Fox" Foccillo, immerses Hal Jordan in a cycle of relived triumphs and failures powered by his ring, as Insomnia corrupts the Green Lantern Corps' willpower. Issue #1 appeared on July 11, 2023, with #2 on August 8, 2023.[61] This entry highlights cosmic-scale nightmares, bridging individual hero arcs to the larger invasion by Insomnia's forces.[91]One-Shot and Special Issues
The Knight Terrors event featured several one-shot and special issues that served as preludes, bookends, and supplementary explorations of the nightmare theme, offering standalone glimpses into the horror elements without requiring prior reading of the core miniseries.[6] The Dawn of DC: Knight Terrors Special Edition #1, released for Free Comic Book Day on May 6, 2023, acted as an introductory sampler, teasing the event's overarching narrative of a supernatural threat invading the DC Universe and highlighting key characters like Batman, Superman, and Wonder Woman confronting early foes. Written by Joshua Williamson with art by Howard Porter and others, this 32-page special provided a non-essential preview of the "Nightmare Realm" concept, distributed free at participating comic shops to build anticipation. Serving as the official kickoff, Knight Terrors: First Blood #1 (July 4, 2023) is an oversize one-shot written by Joshua Williamson and illustrated by Howard Porter, depicting the discovery of a mysterious body at the Hall of Justice and the initial incursion of nightmares into reality, enlisting unlikely allies like Deadman to stem the tide. This 48-page issue, priced at $5.99, expanded on the event's horror motifs through atmospheric artwork and set the stage for character-specific terrors, functioning as optional but enriching entry point.[92] Concluding the saga, Knight Terrors: Night's End #1 (August 29, 2023), also by Williamson and Porter, is another oversize one-shot that resolves the heroes' escape from the Nightmare Realm while introducing lingering threats from the Nightmare League in the waking world. At 48 pages and $5.99, it delivered a climactic wrap-up with high-stakes action and emotional payoffs, emphasizing the event's themes of fear and resilience without delving into individual tie-in arcs, making it a self-contained finale for casual readers.[18] These specials, including two-issue miniseries like Knight Terrors: Ravager #1-2 and Knight Terrors: Angel Breaker #1-2—which explore nightmare confrontations for those characters—provided additional horror vignettes that deepened the event's atmosphere without altering the main storyline's accessibility.Collected Editions
Deluxe Hardcovers
The Knight Terrors crossover event was collected in several deluxe hardcover editions released by DC Comics starting in 2024, offering premium access to the main storyline and grouped tie-in issues focused on specific character teams or themes. These volumes compile the four-issue core miniseries along with preludes and epilogues in one book, while separate hardcovers gather related two-issue miniseries by thematic clusters, such as Batman family stories or Justice League adventures. Each deluxe hardcover typically spans 200-300 pages and retails for around $29.99 to $39.99, providing high-quality presentations for fans seeking targeted portions of the event without purchasing the full lineup.[93] The primary deluxe hardcover, Knight Terrors (ISBN 978-1-77952-459-1), collects the central narrative written by Joshua Williamson with art by Howard Porter and Guillem March. Released on February 6, 2024, this 232-page volume includes Knight Terrors: First Blood #1, Knight Terrors #1-4, Knight Terrors: Night's End #1, and a short story from the Dawn of DC Knight Terrors 2023 FCBD Special Edition. It centers on the Nightmare Stone's unleashing and the heroes' battle against Insomnia's dream invasion, providing the event's foundational plot without extensive tie-ins. A reprint edition followed in late 2024 to meet demand, maintaining the same contents and page count.[94] Tie-in deluxe hardcovers organize the event's numerous two-issue miniseries into curated sets, emphasizing character-specific nightmares. Knight Terrors: Dark Knightmares (ISBN 978-1-77952-465-2), released February 13, 2024, is a 256-page collection featuring Batman and Gotham allies' stories: Knight Terrors: Batman #1-2, Knight Terrors: Catwoman #1-2, Knight Terrors: Nightwing #1-2, Knight Terrors: Robin #1-2, and Knight Terrors: Detective Comics #1-2. These tales explore Bruce Wayne's fears manifesting as corrupted versions of his world, with contributions from writers like James Tynion IV and Becky Cloonan.[95][96] Other key tie-in volumes include Knight Terrors: Knightmare League (ISBN 978-1-77952-467-6), a February 20, 2024, release compiling Justice League-focused nightmares in 240 pages: Knight Terrors: Action Comics #1-2, Knight Terrors: Superman #1-2, Knight Terrors: Wonder Woman #1-2, Knight Terrors: Green Lantern #1-2, and Knight Terrors: Flash #1-2. This edition highlights ensemble hero dynamics under the Nightmare Wave, scripted by creators such as Phillip Kennedy Johnson and Jeremy Adams.[97] Knight Terrors: Knockturnal Creatures (ISBN 978-1-77952-469-0) gathers villain-centric and anti-hero tales in a February 27, 2024, 328-page hardcover: Knight Terrors: Harley Quinn #1-2, Knight Terrors: Poison Ivy #1-2, Knight Terrors: The Joker #1-2, Knight Terrors: Punchline #1-2, and Knight Terrors: Zatanna #1-2. It delves into twisted psyches like Harley's chaotic dreams, with writing by Stephanie Phillips and Tim Seeley.[98][99] Finally, Knight Terrors: Terror Titans (ISBN 978-1-77952-568-0), released March 5, 2024, collects 288 pages of younger hero and magical narratives: Knight Terrors: Titans #1-2, Knight Terrors: Shazam! #1-2, Knight Terrors: Black Adam #1, Knight Terrors: Ravager #1-2, and Knight Terrors: Angel Breaker #1. These stories, by Mark Waid and others, portray teen Titans and mystics confronting amplified insecurities in the dream realm.[100][101]| Title | Release Date | Page Count | ISBN | Key Collected Issues |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Knight Terrors | February 6, 2024 | 232 | 978-1-77952-459-1 | Knight Terrors: First Blood #1; Knight Terrors #1-4; Knight Terrors: Night's End #1; Dawn of DC Knight Terrors 2023 FCBD Special Edition (story) |
| Knight Terrors: Dark Knightmares | February 13, 2024 | 256 | 978-1-77952-465-2 | Knight Terrors: Batman #1-2; Catwoman #1-2; Nightwing #1-2; Robin #1-2; Detective Comics #1-2 |
| Knight Terrors: Knightmare League | February 20, 2024 | 240 | 978-1-77952-467-6 | Knight Terrors: Action Comics #1-2; Superman #1-2; Wonder Woman #1-2; Green Lantern #1-2; Flash #1-2 |
| Knight Terrors: Knockturnal Creatures | February 27, 2024 | 328 | 978-1-77952-469-0 | Knight Terrors: Harley Quinn #1-2; Poison Ivy #1-2; The Joker #1-2; Punchline #1-2; Zatanna #1-2 |
| Knight Terrors: Terror Titans | March 5, 2024 | 288 | 978-1-77952-568-0 | Knight Terrors: Titans #1-2; Shazam! #1-2; Black Adam #1; Ravager #1-2; Angel Breaker #1 |